Ecosystem

Design

Wordpress Source Plugin Tutorial

How to create a site with data pulled from WordPress

What this tutorial covers:

In this tutorial, you will install the gatsby-source-wordpress plugin in order to pull blog and image data from a WordPress install into your Gatsby site and render that data. This Gatsby + Wordpress demo site shows you a sample of what you’re going to be building in this tutorial., although it’s missing the cool images you’ll be adding :D

Why go through this tutorial?

While each source plugin may operate differently from others, it’s worth going through this tutorial because you will almost definitely be using a source plugin in most Gatsby sites you build. This tutorial will walk you through the basics of connecting your Gatsby site to a CMS, pulling in data, and using React to render that data in beautiful ways on your site.

If you’d like to look at the growing number source plugins available to you, search for “source” in the Gatsby plugin library.

Creating a site with the gatsby-source-wordpress plugin

Create a new Gatsby project and change directories into the new project you just created:

Add the gatsby-source-wordpress plugin to gatsby-config.js using the following code, which you can also find in the demo site’s source code.

module.exports ={
siteMetadata:{
title:'Gatsby Wordpress Tutorial',},
plugins:[// https://public-api.wordpress.com/wp/v2/sites/gatsbyjsexamplewordpress.wordpress.com/pages//*
* Gatsby's data processing layer begins with “source”
* plugins. Here the site sources its data from Wordpress.
*/{ resolve:`gatsby-source-wordpress`, options:{/*
* The base URL of the Wordpress site without the trailingslash and the protocol. This is required.
* Example : 'gatsbyjswpexample.wordpress.com' or 'www.example-site.com'
*/ baseUrl:`dev-gatbsyjswp.pantheonsite.io`,// The protocol. This can be http or https. protocol:`http`,// Indicates whether the site is hosted on wordpress.com.// If false, then the asumption is made that the site is self hosted.// If true, then the plugin will source its content on wordpress.com using the JSON REST API V2.// If your site is hosted on wordpress.org, then set this to false. hostingWPCOM:false,// If useACF is true, then the source plugin will try to import the Wordpress ACF Plugin contents.// This feature is untested for sites hosted on Wordpress.com useACF:true,},},],}

Creating GraphQL queries that pull data from WordPress

Now you are ready to create a GraphQL query to pull in some data from the WordPress site. You will create a query that pulls in the title of the blogposts, date they were posted, and blogpost content.

Run:

gatsby develop

In your browser, open localhost:8000 to see your site, and open localhost:8000/___graphql iso that you can create your GraphQL queries.

As an exercise, try re-creating the following queries in your GraphiQL explorer. This first query will pull in the blogpost content from WordPress:

Rendering the blogposts to index.js

Now that you’ve created GraphQL queries that pull in the data you want, we’ll use that second query to create a list of sorted blogpost titles on your site’s homepage. Here is what your index.js should look like: